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Wagner's first encounter with Franz Liszt ocurred inParis in 1840. His impression of the flamboyant virtuoso was tinged with some envy, for Wagner was barely eking out a living by making piano arrangements of contemporary operas such Halévy's La reine de Chypre and Meyerbeer's Robert le diable. He registered "stupefaction" as Liszt's keyboard artistry, but wrote wrote that he was "the last person in the world able to appreciate adequately the achievements of such a person who at the time was sunning himself in the brightest light of day, whereas I had turned my back and faced the night." Although Wagner could easily have capitalized on the insatiable Parisian market for piano music, he wrote very little for the keyboard. Some would argue that his piano works are unidiomatic, sounding like preliminary drafts for budding orchestral texture; their well-spaced contrapuntal activity suggests the sound images that would become familiar in his opera. ...

In the 1840s, Wagner tried to ease his financial burden by turning his hand to song composition - a genre he had never before attempted - and composed several songs in the unfamiliar language of French. The songs were published in 1841, as supplements to Lewald's journal Europa. ...

The symbiotic creative relationship between Liszt and Wagner became even more intense in the years 1882-83. At this time, Liszt wrote no fewer than four original works, all either premonitions of Wagner's death (La lugrube gondole I and II) or inspired by his memory (R. W. - Venezia; Am Grabe Richard Wagners). In some cases Liszt, ever the musical visionary, drew on motives from Wagner's Parsifal and transformed them into musical manifestos that foreshadowed the most forward-looking music of the next century.

Liszt's last visiti with Wagner (Venice, 26 November 1882 - 13 January 1883) proved particularly unhappy. He found Wagner in diminished health and spirits, and exhausted from the strain of mounting the previous summer's Bayreuth Festival, which was devoted to the premiere of Pasifal. Liszt's daughter, Cosima, recorded in her diary how Wagner denigrated Liszt's "new works, declaring them to be completely meaningless... accusing them of being the products of 'incipient madness.'" ...

Despite the gloomy memory of this last visit with Wagner, as always Liszt's magnanimity won out. He inscribed the manuscript of Am Grabe Richard Wagners: "Wagner once reminded me of the similarity between his Parsifal motives and my earlier composition Excelsior (Introduction to the Bells of Strasbourg). May these rememberances live on here. He achieved the great and the sublime in the art of the present." Liszt signed and dated the autograph 22 May 1883. This would have been Wagner's 70th birthday had he not died three months earlier. ...

Rena Charnin Mueller


Wagner

Eine Sonate für das Album von Frau M[athilde] W[esendonk]
Albumblatt für Frau Betty Schott
Ankunft bei den schwarzen Schwänen
Mignonne*
Attente*
Tout n'est qu'images fugitives*
Les deux grenadiers*
Im Treibhaus*


Liszt

R[ichard]W[agner] - Venezia
Am Grabe Richard Wagners
Feierlicher Marsch zum Heiligen Gral, aus "Parsifal"
Isoldes Liebestod, aus "Tristan und Isolde"


Gerhard Oppitz, playing Wagner's original grand piano
Nathalie Stuzmann, contralto*



During a busy and fruitful career, Dame Janet Baker consistently involved and moved her audiences by making every song or aria she sang seem the most important thingfor that moment in both their lives and hers. It is a gift vouchsafed to few artists. Although hard to analyse precisely, it undoubtedly arose from her being what I would call a conviction singer. She realised that the text was as important as the music. In her singing we don't just hear the voice beautiful - though her tone is distinctive, rich and individual in timbre - but a message, sad or happy, that is of the essence of her being. These virtues are preserved for us and future generations in her rich legacy of recordings. ...

Alan Blyth, 1994


Fauré, Schubert, R. Strauss, Vaughan Williams, Stanford,
Parry, Busch, Warlock, Gurney, Britten, Ireland, Quilter


Mélodies, Lieder, Songs


Dame Janet Baker, mezzo-soprano
Gerald Moore, piano


Quality: mp3, varied kbps
Size: 133 MB


... In this effort Berlioz, Liszt and Wagner not only composed the grand-scale works for which they are best known, but they each devoted energy at varying points in their careers to the art of song. For Berlioz and Wagner composing for voice and piano occupied their youthful careers and constituted only a fraction of their total output, while for Liszt his eight-four songs represent a more significant body of vocal composition. Yet, however atypical Wagner's early "curiosities" or Berlioz's unorchestrated songs are, they are important documents which reveal the development of each composer's musical language and thematic material. All three, for example, relied on contemporary poetic inspiration, drawing texts from major writers like Hugo, Heine, Musset, Moore and Tennyson as well as minor ones like Reboul, Rellstab and Scheurlin, just as they returned to the great lyric voices of the past like Goethe and Schiller. All three recognized the noble marriage of music and poetry, and all three were influenced by the dual forces of the evolving German Ballade and Lied, as passed down from Schubert, Schumann, Franz or Loewe, and of the developing French mélodie derived from the older romance tradition and enriched by the influence of heightened folksong such as Thomas Moore's Irish Melodies. ...

Thomas Hampson and 
Carla Maria Verdino-Süllwold



Berlioz, Liszt, Wagner

Romantische Lieder
(Romantic Songs)

Thomas Hampson, baritone
Geoffrey Parsons, piano



Quality: mp3, varied kbps
Size: 113 MB



Debussy & Mozart

Songs (Mélodies & Lieder)

Juliane Banse, sopran
András Schiff, piano


DL Debussy & Mozart songs

Quality: mp3, 192 kbps
Size: 87 MB







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